Sony Is Still Trying To Stop People From Hacking The Vita, For Some Reason

Less than a day after a new exploit for jailbreaking the Vita was discovered, Sony has already released a new firmware update to safeguard its sunsetting handheld.

“Surprise! h-encore² released for PS Vita firmware 3.71,” Andy Nguyen, a Vita hacker behind the recent Trinity Exploit for jailbreaking the most up-to-date versions of the handheld, announced on Monday. Unlike the Trinity Exploit, which required using a PSP game to hack the Vita, h-encore² is a native hack, meaning it can be done directly on the system. And while some hacks on work on Vitas running older software, h-encore² was designed to work on any firmware version between 3.65 and 3.71, the most recent one.

While hacking the Vita can be used to pirate games, it can also be used for benign things like emulating old games, running third-party programs, overclocking, and even backing up save data without needing to rely on Sony’s extremely overpriced, proprietary Vita memory cards.

And for all intents and purposes, Vita has also been unofficially retired, leaving some people in the homebrew community scratching their heads about why Sony has seemingly redoubled its efforts to safeguard it. The Vita no longer gets new monthly PlayStation Plus games, and production of new game cartridges ended earlier this year. “I need a movie about the 4 guys at Sony who still have to work on the Vita in friggin 2019,” wrote one person on Twitter.

But Nguyen isn’t giving up either. The hacker recently put out a tutorial for finding new exploits and has invited people to join him in discovering a way to break firmware 3.72 as well.